Ab-initio Nuclear Structure and Nuclear Reactions

PI Gaute Hagen, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Co-PI Joseph Carlson, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Serdar Elhatisari, Gaziantep Islam Science and Technology University
Stefano Gandolfi, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Gustav R. Jansen, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Dean J. Lee, Facility for Rare Isotope Beams and Michigan State University
Alessandro Lovato, Argonne National Laboratory
Pieter Maris, Iowa State University
Petr Navrátil, TRIUMF
Thomas Papenbrock, University of Tennessee and Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Saori Pastore, Washington University in St. Louis
Maria Piarulli, Washington University in St. Louis
James P. Vary, Iowa State University
Robert B. Wiringa, Argonne National Laboratory
Hagen Incite Photo

Accurate ab-initio predictions of properties atomic nuclei and neutron stars (connecting systems that differ by 18 orders in magnitude in size) are made possible by access to exascale computing on Frontier at OLCF and on Aurora at ALCF. Image: Andy Sproles, Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Project Summary

This project will advance our understanding of nuclear phenomena by targeting predictive capabilities regarding structure and reactions of nuclei, fundamental symmetries, and neutrino and electron interactions in nuclei.

Project Description

This INCITE project will continue their work to improve the simulation capabilities of atomic nuclei and nuclear matter, and their reactions with neutrinos and electrons. The team will advance the understanding of nuclear phenomena by targeting predictive capabilities regarding structure and reactions of nuclei, fundamental symmetries, and neutrino and electron interactions in nuclei. The project targets experiments and science at the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB), Jefferson Laboratory (JLab), the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE), and ton-scale detectors for neutrinoless double β decay. Using DOE’s exascale supercomputers, the team will perform state-of-the-art simulations to provide quantified predictions where direct experiment is not possible or is subject to large uncertainties. Such calculations are relevant to many applications in nuclear energy, nuclear security, and nuclear astrophysics, since rare nuclei lie at the heart of nucleosynthesis and energy generation in stars.

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